Saturday, August 10, 2013

I think lower cost phablets like Starmobile Diamond V3, Cherry Mobile Blaze 2.0 and MyPhone Aqua Iceberg might develop a very solid space in the market. Not just for people who like large devices, but for people who carry two devices too. See, I
am probably one of the most anti-phablet people on the planet, but the low cost phablet is starting to change my mind.

While I
have never been one to carry two smartphones, a lot of people do.
Carrying two devices is primarily done to take advantage of the services of multiple carriers. These days carrying a second device could also be done for other reasons. A simple feature phone gives you a nice compact device with
long battery life. A phablet would give you a larger display, which
would be nicer to use in some situations that your primary smartphone.

If
you see not in the habit of carrying two phones, now might be a good
time to start.

Phablets
can be had for pretty low prices these days, if you are willing to buy
one from one of the local brands. Since it will be backup device, perceive or
actual issues about reliability of local brands are not as important. While I would not want to spend Php25,000 on a backup device. Php8,000-12,000 seems like the right price for a backup device. At this
price range the Starmobile Diamond V3, Cherry Mobile Blaze 2.0 and
the MyPhone Agua Iceberg.

I
like the Diamond V3 best in terms of size, but the FWVGA display is a
bit of a downer. Given the limitations of Adreno 203 graphics,
this was probably a good design choice by Starmobile. The 5.3-inch display will also not
be to attractive to those whose primary phone is already 4.7 to
5-inches in size. That is where the 5.7inch Blaze 2.0 and Iceberg
come in.

Consider
it a battery life extension tool. Modern
Android, iOS and Windows smartphones these days have pretty good
battery life. Still it is just about to get you past a day. By
off-loading part of your work load to a phablet, you will extend the
life of your smartphone. Given that most high smartphones these days
do not have user replaceable batteries, this will also extend the
useful life of your primary device.

Pang
harabas. Nothing
kills your smartphone, and degrades its battery, faster than running it at high temperatures for
extended periods. Playing games on
a inexpensive phablet seems to make sense. Let the hear device be the
one to suffer heavy wear and tear from long 3D gaming sessions.

You
won't need two data plans. Most
of us switch between 3G/LTE and WiFi networks throughout the day, depending on
where we happen to be. You can make your smartphone your 3G/LTE
device, and your phablet a device you use while on WiFi.

Why
not a tablet? If
you already carry a tablet around all the time, you probably won't
need a phablet. But I think as compared to even smaller tablets,
phablets are just much nicer to carry around. They will fit a jacket
or pants pocket well enough, and slide into even the smallest of
handbags.They
are also more confortable to use when held up to your face with one
hand.

So,
if you are buying a second smartphone, my advice would be to make it
a phablet.

I find this article interesting because that really is how people think, I guess, nowadays. Back when people were carrying multiple devices (a mobile phone and a pda), people wanted a convergent device. Now that we have these convergent devices, we want two (or more) for different purposes or to lessen the burden on their 'main device'. I do carry extra phones (actually I carry three phones + a tablet) to make use of different network services. I don't consider them 'backup' though. Having one for each network helps me control my mobile expenses. But it is beginning to become a hassle. Maybe I'll consider having a dual sim phablet in the future :)But really what would be most useful to me is for the telcos to consolidate their costing and make it more affordable when communicating with other networks.

If you're using globe on prepaid you can try their goSakto promos, at P242 you get 500 mins of calls to globe and 100 sms to globe as well. That's actually less than 50 cents per minute of calls. Not bad if you make a lot of globe calls, more sulit than their postpaid options I think.